Thursday, January 25

And The Winner Is

At the bid opening for the construction of the new Sheriffs Department/Jail the County received four (4) bids.

Worsham Brothers, Corinth, MS - $10,139,000
Inman construction Corp., Memphis TN - $10,086,000
Lashlee-Rich, Inc., Humboldt, TN - $9,391,000
Watlington Brothers, Jackson, TN - $9,298,000

The major sub-contractors are:

Electrical - Wade Electric, Trenton, TN
Plumbing - Advanced Plumbing Co., Inc. - Cordova,TN
Mechanical (HVAC) - Hardin-Darious Heating & Air, Savannah, TN

Based on the quality of the bidders that participated, it appears as if the bidding process went off without any major problems and was conducted in a very professional manner. My compliments and kudos to TLM and the Jail Committee.

Respectfully Submitted
Ted

Sunday, January 14

Rabies/Animal Control - Hardin County

Rabies Is a Serious Public Health Problem!
Rabies Is Fatal!
Got It?

If you think we have a rabies/animal control program in Hardin County, you could be dead wrong. That’s a fact, Jack.

So, who is responsible, you say. Glad you ask.

The vast majority of the Citizens of Hardin County are not holding up their end or doing their part and you can bet that our county government, including the Hardin County Health Department, are not doing their part.

That’s just wrong, but then again there has been no one able to make either one of them understand what their respective part was. Thought I would give it a shot.

Less than 5,000 animals in Hardin County have current vaccinations and that can be tracked primarily to the efforts of the privately funded spade and neutering programs, primarily by the Horse Creek Wild Life folks. Thank you, very much.

We don’t have animal/rabies control and your local legislative body, that would be the Mayor/County Commission, of course, gives out lip service about we can’t afford it or we got something else to pay for first. That’s just wrong, too. One needs to cover the costs safety and welfare of the community, whatever that cost may be, before one spends a lot of our resources on inviting others to come visit us.

We (Hardin County) make no contribution to an effective local, state or national rabies-control program. We make no effort to prevent or eliminate exposures to rabid animals.

The standard of procedures among jurisdictions that contribute to an effect national rabies-control program states as a CRITICAL component, that local governments should initiate and maintain effective programs to ensure vaccination of all dogs, cats, and ferrets and to remove strays and unwanted animals from the community.

This latest version of the standard procedures is known as Compendium of Animal Rabies Prevention and Control, 2007 and is published by the National Association of State Public Health Veterinarians, Inc. (NASPHV). As a note, a compendium is a concise yet comprehensive compilation of a body of knowledge.

This compendium, the accepted authority on rabies prevention and animal control, also points out that such procedures in the United States have reduced laboratory-confirmed cases of rabies in dogs from about 7,000 in 1947 to 94 in 2004.

Rabies prevention activities at the state and local levels, although not in Hardin County, have been aimed at reducing exposure to rabies-infected animals and insuring proper treatment when exposure occurs.

There are six (6) designated critical components of these activities for human rabies prevention and they are as follows:


1.) Enhanced Public Health Education;

2.) Domestic Animal Vaccination;

3.) Responsible Pet Ownership;

4.) Rapid, Accurate Laboratory Testing;

5.) Modern Stray Animal Control; and

6.) Timely and Appropriate Prophylaxis.


Well, let’s see, how does Hardin County compare? Glad you ask.

We have no stray animal control, let alone modern, for all practical purposes we have no effective domestic animal vaccination effort and enhanced would hardly describe the public health education efforts in Hardin County. Responsible pet ownership does not apply or even seem to be a concern to the majority, but then again, what is it? Glad you ask.

This accepted authority’s standards are that to be a responsible pet owner, one must do four basic things:

1.) Keep vaccinations up-to-date for all dogs, cats and ferrets. This requirement is important not only to keep your pets from getting rabies, but also to provide a barrier of protection to you, if your animal is bitten by a rabid wild animal.


2.) Keep your pets under direct supervision so they do not come in contact with wild animals.


3.) Call your local animal control agency to remove any stray animals from your neighborhood. They may be unvaccinated and could be infected by the disease.

4.) Spay or neuter your pets to help reduce the number of unwanted pets that may not be properly cared for or regularly vaccinated.


Well, let’s see. With less than an estimated 15% - 20% of the known domestic animals legally vaccinated, that one is not working very well at all. It's the DUTY of pet owners and caretakers to have their animals vacinatted. That's the law in Tennessee, even in Hardin County.

You may not have known it, but, under direct supervision is another way of saying ‘leash law’ and yes we do have one of those in the State of Tennessee, which of course includes Hardin County. But then again, who knew?

Not being able to call your local animal control agency, because it’s not a secret that we don’t have one, probably shouldn’t be counted against the Hardin County citizens on this score card, but not standing up and demanding one, probable should be.
Respectfully submitted for your consideration.
Uncle Ted

Tuesday, January 2

Be Responsible Pet Owners, Yah, Right!!


Rabies prevention activities at the state and local levels have been aimed at reducing exposure to rabies-infected animals and insuring proper treatment when exposure occurs. For example, in some states, like Tennessee, vaccination requirements for both dogs and cats have been statutorily mandated.

Health departments, in collaboration with veterinary associations and animal-control and animal-welfare groups, have provided educational materials to the public about wildlife rabies, pet vaccination, and recognition of exposures to potentially rabid animals. Education efforts have targeted veterinarians and physicians because they often are the first to be informed of possible rabies exposures.

State public health departments, state and local governments, CDC, and other federal agencies are collaborating to develop programs to control rabies outbreaks and the movement of the virus in the wild. Information about rabies is available from state and local health departments and from CDC’’s Viral and Rickettsial Zoonoses Branch, Division of Viral and Rickettsial Diseases, National Center for Infectious Diseases; telephone (404) 639-1075.

Human Rabies Prevention: Critical Components

•Enhanced public health education
•Domestic animal vaccination
•Responsible pet ownership
•Rapid, accurate laboratory testing
•Modern stray animal control
•Timely and appropriate prophylaxis

Domestic Animals. Local governments should initiate and maintain effective programs to ensure vaccination of all dogs, cats, and ferrets and to remove strays and unwanted animals. Such procedures in the United States have reduced laboratory-confirmed cases of rabies in dogs from 6,949 in 1947 to 117 in 2003.

What the Citizens Are Told to Do to Help Prevent the Spread of Rabies? Be a Responsible Pet Owner:

Keep vaccinations up-to-date for all dogs, cats and ferrets. This requirement is important not only to keep your pets from getting rabies, but also to provide a barrier of protection to you, if your animal is
bitten by a rabid wild animal.

Keep your pets under direct supervision so they do not come in contact with wild animals. If your pet is bitten by a wild animal, seek veterinary assistance for the animal immediately.

Call your local animal control agency to remove any stray animals from your neighborhood. They may be unvaccinated and could be infected by the disease.

Spay or neuter your pets to help reduce the number of unwanted pets that may not be properly cared for or regularly vaccinated.


Note: [From the most recent Compendium of Animal Rabies Vaccines published by the Association of State Public Health Veterinarians that is used as the guideline, by public health officials. Compendium (2006)]

Dogs, Cats, and Ferrets. All dogs, cats, and ferrets should be [and shall be, in Tennessee] vaccinated against rabies and re-vaccinated in accordance with Part III of this compendium. If a previously vaccinated animal is overdue for a booster, it should be re-vaccinated. Immediately following the booster, the animal is considered currently vaccinated and should be placed on an annual or triennial schedule depending on the type of vaccine used.

Stray Animals. Stray dogs, cats, and ferrets should be removed from the community. Local health departments and animal control officials can enforce the removal of strays more effectively if owned animals have identification and are confined or kept on leash. Strays should be impounded for at least 3 business days to determine if human exposure has occurred and to give owners sufficient time to reclaim animals.

Adjunct Procedures. - Methods or procedures which enhance rabies control include the following:

a. Identification. Dogs, cats, and ferrets should be identified (e.g., metal or plastic tags or microchips) to allow for verification of rabies vaccination status.

b. Licensure. Registration or licensing of all dogs, cats, and ferrets may be used to aid in rabies control. A fee is frequently charged for such licensing, and revenues collected are used to
maintain rabies- or animal-control programs. Evidence of current vaccination is an essential prerequisite to licensing.

c. Canvassing. House-to-house canvassing by animal control officials facilitates enforcement of vaccination and licensing requirements.

d. Citations. Citations are legal summonses issued to owners for violations, including the failure to vaccinate or license their animals. The authority for officers to issue citations should be an integral part of each animal-control program.

e. Animal Control. All communities should incorporate stray animal control, leash laws, and training of personnel in their programs.

Post Exposure Management. Any animal potentially exposed to rabies virus by a wild, carnivorous mammal or a bat that is not available for testing should be regarded as having been exposed to rabies.

a. Dogs, Cats, and Ferrets. - Unvaccinated dogs, cats, and ferrets exposed to a rabid animal should be euthanized immediately.

Exposed to a Rabid Animal? - What are the odds or potential that some of the stray, mostly unvaccinated, dogs and cats in Hardin County have been exposed to a wild, carnivorous mammal or bat, that has, or has been exposed to, one of the several types of rabies viruses, known to be in the neighborhood?

Hardin County deserves the enhanced rabies control program, because of our geographical location relative to the movement of rabies in our wildlife around and in the region. This is not something that should be ignored, for any reason.
Respectfully submitted for your consideration.
Uncle Ted